(DailyMail) Eritrean distance runner, Tsegai Tewelde, to represent UK in Rio

From: Biniam Tekle <biniamt_at_dehai.org_at_dehai.org>
Date: Sun, 21 Aug 2016 09:43:10 -0400

"The freedom he mentions is so profound he can now travel back to
Eritrea as a Briton and has no trouble there because of that. He has
been back to Asmara for altitude training"


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/othersports/article-3751042/Tsegai-Tewelde-blown-landmine-escaped-seek-asylum-Scotland-represent-Team-GB-second-marathon.html?ITO=1490&ns_mchannel=rss&ns_campaign=1490

Tsegai Tewelde was blown up by a landmine, escaped to seek asylum in
Scotland and will now represent Team GB in only his second marathon

*Tsegai Tewelde will run the Rio Olympic marathon for Team GB
*The 26-year-old Eritrea-born athlete was blown up by a mine aged eight
*He was granted asylum in 2014 having fled cross country event in 2008
*After finishing 12th at the London Marathon he qualified for the Olympics

By Nick Harris for The Mail on Sunday

Published: 18:46 EST, 20 August 2016 | Updated: 18:46 EST, 20 August 2016

You need to lean in close to listen to Tsegai Tewelde, the 26-year-old
Eritrea-born athlete who will run the Rio Olympic marathon for Team
GB. He is so softly spoken it can be hard to hear him unless you are
within inches. And parts of his story are so extraordinary that you
want to make sure you catch them correctly.

We are in Glasgow, his adopted home city, sitting at a corner table in
a cafe at a museum in a park. 'I was eight,' he says, barely above a
whisper. 'I was in the countryside.' He pauses. 'The bomb. My friend
trod. I don't remember a lot.'

Our heads are not far apart and the thick scar that runs across
Tewelde's right temple is just one of the physical reminders of the
incident we are discussing.

Tewelde was blown up a by a landmine in his native Eritrea aged just eight

Tewelde grew up in the highlands outside Eritrea's capital, Asmara,
the son of a farmer. Like many places in his native country, the
region was peppered with land mines.

'Even as a child I was very active,' he says. 'Our life then, it was
running all day.'

One morning he and his friend, the same age, were crossing a field
when his companion stepped on a land mine that killed him. The
explosion rendered Tewelde unconscious, riddled with shrapnel and in a
fight for his life.

'I was numb,' he says, talking not just about the hours and days
ahead. 'They took me to the hospital. It wasn't far but there wasn't a
vehicle. They carried me half way. They carried me down the mountain.
Then the ambulance came. I have five parts of my body …'

He stops speaking, not because he cannot go on but because there is
not much else to add, except to gesture to the areas damaged in the
blast: the side of his skull, his chin, neck and two areas on the
front of his torso.

It would only be later, after travelling to Edinburgh for the world
cross country championships in 2008, then defecting in the night,
crossing Scotland, claiming asylum, settling into a new, dislocated
life and gaining access to modern healthcare, that most of the metal
was finally removed. One piece remains, somewhere in his chest.

That is just part of Tewelde's tale, the bit that most profoundly
affected his body, a body that has only ever run one marathon to date,
in London in April.

He finished in 12th place in two hours, 12 minutes and 23 seconds to
qualify for Rio as part of a three-man British contingent over 26
miles. The other two are also Glasgow-based, brothers Callum and Derek
Hawkins. To reiterate, the Rio race will be just the second marathon
of Tewelde's life. There is a palpable thrill and pride he feels at
being able to represent Britain and a gratitude at having been so
warmly received here.

Before 2008, Tewelde had kept some fine athletic company,
sporadically. He was fifth in the 1500m at the 2006 junior world
championships in Beijing in a race where silver went to Abdalaati
Iguider of Morocco, who became an Olympic medallist in London. That
2006 meeting was also a springboard for Kenya's David Rudisha, Olympic
gold winner since and Jamaica's Yohan Blake, ditto, among others.

'Tsegai obviously had talent at that young age but circumstances meant
it never developed,' says John Mackay, Tewelde's coach and a father
figure these past eight years.

Mackay is a teacher by day and a coach at Shettleston Harriers most of
the rest of the time. He first met Tewelde when the latter was one of
six Eritrean cross country runners claiming asylum in March 2008.

'I don't want to speak about politics,' says Tewelde. But it was
established at the time that he and his team-mates were effectively
threatened by an Eritrean official that they could be kicked off the
squad if they under-performed and face conscription to the army and
all the brutality that would entail.

Instead, they fled in the night to an Edinburgh train station and
bought tickets to where the cash in their pockets would take them.
That was Glasgow. The group went straight to the nearest police
station and handed themselves in. 'On the Monday, I got a call from
the Refugee Council saying were we interested in six athletes,' says
Mackay.


'They came to the track. At that point they hadn't even been granted
leave to stay. They had no possessions except their clothes. We did
what we could.'

Tewelde was helped by the local authorities with basic
accommodation.He took work where he found it, as a care assistant in a
nursing home and as a kitchen porter. And he ran, despite weather and
circumstances that often made life miserable. 'It was dark for me at
times,' he says.

For years he could not contemplate going back to Eritrea to visit. His
brother died in his absence and Tewelde could not return for the
funeral. There was a five-year wait before being able even to apply
for British citizenship, then a 20-month application process to
negotiate on top. 'But at Shettleston, I felt like family,' he says.
'That was important.'

I ask Tewelde if he can remember how he felt when he got his British
passport and his response is not just immediate but audible from feet
away. Emphatic. He says: 'December 6, 2014.'

How did that feel? 'I couldn't believe it,' he says, beaming. 'It gave
me freedom.'

How did he celebrate? 'I didn't do anything special. I told my friends
and we had a cup of tea.'

The freedom he mentions is so profound he can now travel back to
Eritrea as a Briton and has no trouble there because of that. He has
been back to Asmara for altitude training.

It is cheap at least, which is a plus because he has no funding aside
from the odd private donation and some basic kit.

He may get Lottery money from this September onwards after his London
marathon and depending on his performance in Rio. He gained entry into
the London elite field with a wild card from race director Dave
Bedford. Tewelde repaid the faith with a top-12 finish on his distance
debut, although he gave Mackay a fright, watching on TV at home.

'They started commentating on the lead group and Steve Cram said the
Hawkins brothers were not the first Brits and that Tsegai Tewelde was
a minute clear of them,' the coach says, a smile on his face.

'I thought, 'Oh dear, he has gone out too fast'. I thought he'd killed
his chances and in the final 5k we were watching him die on his legs
so I was so pleased he got there. The lad has been running 130 miles a
week!'

Tewelde himself smiles. 'I hit the wall,' he says. His aim for Rio, he
says, is 'to try my best and get a personal best.'

The reality is that Tewelde has already won in many senses, simply by
getting to the Games.

Mackay says: 'Tsegai's story shows that, if you apply yourself, you
can do very well. I'm proud of him just as I'm proud of all the guys
in the club.

'At training last week we had athletes who are of Polish origin and
Iranian, Eritrean, Scottish, Italian, Irish, Ugandan, Somalian. We're
a multi-cultural city with good integration. Tsegai's story is a good
story about Glasgow and Scotland.'

And the human spirit, which is always at the heart of the best stories
in any Olympics.
Received on Sun Aug 21 2016 - 08:22:54 EDT

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